Essential Reading

Could it be that certain powers have a vested interest in keeping our real history under wraps? Because a great deal has been unearthed which is completely at odds with conventional notions regarding the origins of what we know today as America

Using legal injunctions, Dov Zakheim’s lawyers forced this website to remove an article we posted with the same title; which tells us he may have something to hide. Seems like others also think so as this video indicates. Watch it while you still can

Jack Bernstein was a rarity, an American Zionist who ‘returned’ to Israel, not for a holiday but to live and die in Israel building a Jewish nation. What makes him almost one of a kind, however, was his ability to see through the sham of Zionism

Gen. Leonid Ivashov was Chief of Staff of Russian armed forces when the 9/11 attacks took place, but he says, they weren’t carried out by Osama or al-Qaeeda. The most likely culprits, says the General, were transnational mafias and international oligarchs

How President Ahmadinejad’s words were mistranslated and deliberately distorted. So that the term “wiped off the map” has now become synonymous with the Iranian leader’s attitude to Israel – even though he never uttered those words

Elizabeth Guthrie, the daughter of a New York stockbroker, told Scotland Yard detectives early in their inquiries of Mr Williams’ concerns, it was reported in The Sunday Times.

She is due to give evidence at his inquest this week, which will attempt to unravel the circumstances that led to the brilliant mathematician’s demise.

Relatives of the 31-year-old will demand to find out if he was killed in a sinister cover-up by secret services.

Police and security services are convinced his demise was linked to his personal life.

But police sources have hinted that MI6 and GCHQ have been reluctant to reveal what Williams was working on at the time and whether it may have provoked a foreign intelligence service or crime syndicate to come after him.

A coroner will hear from fellow agents, police and friends of Mr Williams this week a bid to solve the 21-month mystery.

Family members fear ‘some agency specialising in the dark arts’ leaves them with no way of knowing how and why he died.

Scotland Yard has drawn a blank in its bid to explain whether he died at the hands of a third party.

Relatives believe someone was either present when he died or broke into his home afterwards to destroy evidence.

Coroner Fiona Wilcox, who has expressed frustration at police over a DNA ‘error’, is expected to hear from about 30 witnesses over at least five days.

She says that whether Mr Williams was alive inside the bag and locked it himself ‘was at the very heart of this inquiry’.

Mr Williams, of Anglesey, North Wales, was found in alarge North Face holdall, sealed by a padlock, at his top-floor flat in Alderney Street.

A battery of post-mortem tests failed to determine how he died and police originally found it would have been impossible for him to have locked himself inside.

Family lawyer Anthony O’Toole has said the inquest at Westminster Coroner’s Court must establish why there was no evidence of another person in his London apartment.

He told a pre-inquest review: ‘The impression of the family is that the unknown third party was a member of some agency specialising in the dark arts of the secret services, or evidence has been removed post-mortem by experts in those dark arts.’

The mathematics prodigy worked as a cipher and codes expert for GCHQ, the Government listening station, but had been on secondment with MI6 since March 2010.

Mr O’Toole added: ‘In our submission, to properly explore the circumstances of the death, we need to establish the deceased’s work.’

Relatives want to know why the alarm was not raised when Mr Williams initially failed to turn up to work.

By the time officers arrived at his flat, his body was so decomposed that evidence had been lost.

It emerged last month that two areas of investigation were red herrings.

Forensic teams mistakenly flagged up a spot of DNA on Mr Williams’s hand in 2010, before realising just six weeks ago that it matched a scientist on the crime scene.

It also emerged that a Mediterranean couple police wanted to speak to were irrelevant to Mr Williams’s death.

Dr Wilcox has indicated she may want to see a practical demonstration of how Mr Williams might have got into the bag and locked it himself.

Experts agree that locking the bag from the inside ‘would have been very difficult, if not impossible’, Metropolitan Police lawyer Vincent Williams said.

The inquest will hear that Mr Williams may have died after breathing too much carbon dioxide.

There were no signs of struggle on his body and blood tests have not shown any drugs in his system.